Citing voter bribery and corruption, EC cancels RK Nagar bypoll

Chennai: Just two days after the income tax department raided Tamil Nadu health minister Vijayabaskar residence and reportedly seized evidence of bribing voters, the election commission late on Sunday cancelled the by-election to the RK Nagar constituency.

All actions and steps taken by the returning officer have been declared null and void

The bypoll in the cancelled RK Nagar Assembly seat that fell vacant due to the demise of state chief minister J Jayalalithaa was scheduled for April 12.

The by-election to fill the vacancy in RK Nagar “shall be held by the commission in due course when the vitiating effect created by the distribution of money and gift items to lure the electors gets removed with the passage of time, and the atmosphere in the constituency becomes conducive to the holding of free and fair election,” said a 29-page statement signed by chief election commissioner Nasim Zaidi and his two associates and election commissioners AK Joti and OP Rawat.

The EC’s decision came two days after IT sleuths launched extensive searches and raids on the residence and several premises of Vijayabaskar across Tamil Nadu.

Following the said raids, the IT officials told media persons on Friday that the raids helped uncover a major plot to bribe voters. The documents unearthed showed that close to Rs 90 crore was to distributed to voters in RK Nagar constituency by the AIADMK Amma party which fielded TTV Dhinakaran, the nephew of Sasikala Natrajan, who is serving a jail term in connection with DA case against her and others.

In its detailed order, the commission said that considering its duty “to conduct free and fair elections and to uphold the purity of election and after taking into account all the facts and circumstances,” it is satisfied that RK Nagar poll process has been “seriously vitiated”. This was on account of unlawful activities of the candidates and political parties and their workers who bribed the electors and unlawfully induced them by offering money and other gifts of consumable items to woo them in their favour.

In the commission’s considered opinion, allowing the current electoral process to pro allowing the current electoral process to proceed and conducting the poll in the constituency on April 12, as scheduled, in such vitiated atmosphere would severely jeopardise the conduct of free and fair election in the said constituency, said the statement.

Earlier too, in similar circumstances, the commission was constrained to rescind the 2016 assembly elections to the Aravakurichi and Thanjavur assembly constituencies in Tamil Nadu, the EC noted.

“Before parting with the case, the commission cannot help expressing its anguish over the sordid state of affairs as revealed in the reports of the election expenditure observers, election expenditure monitoring teams, static surveillance teams, flying squad teams, video surveillance teams, as well as the reports of the income tax authorities,” the statement said.

The innovative ways which the political parties and their leaders at the top echelons have devised to bypass the law enforcing authorities entrusted with the task of keeping an eye on the unauthorised and illegal expenses incurred in the conduct of election campaigns of their party candidates need to be dealt with, with a heavy hand, said the EC.

“Some of the states have particularly excelled in innovating more and more subtle ways to circumvent the statutory provisions enacted by parliament to curb the menace of money power in elections,” said the commission.

The top leaderships of the parties cannot feign ignorance about such illegal activities being indulged in by the candidates set by their parties, and also the managers appointed by their parties to oversee the election campaigns of their candidates. “If not their express consent, their tacit approval to resort to such undesirable activities on the part of their candidates and electoral managers cannot be wished away. It is high time they exerted their moral influence and legal authority to rein in their erring candidates and electoral managers without loss of time if democracy is to flourish and deepen its roots in our country,” it said.

Hence, the commission directed under Article 324 of the Constitution read with sections 150, 30 and 56 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, and further read with Section 21 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 and all other powers enabling it in this behalf, that its notification dated March 16 announcing the byelection stands rescinded forthwith.

Consequently, all actions and steps taken by the returning officer have been declared null and void, the EC stated.